Iraqi political progress still iffy

By Anne Flaherty and Anne Gearan THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Friday

Aug 31, 2007 at 12:34 AM

An independent assessment concluding Iraq has made little political progress in recent months despite an influx of U.S. troops drew fierce objections from the White House yesterday, and provided fresh ammunition for Democrats who want to bring troops home.

The political wrangling came days before the report was to be officially released and while most lawmakers were still out of town for the August recess, reflecting the high stakes involved for both sides in the Iraq war debate. President Bush, who planned to meet today at the Pentagon with the joint chiefs of staff, is nearing a decision on a way forward in Iraq while Congress planned another round of votes this fall to end the war.

A draft report by the Government Accountability Office concluded Iraq has satisfied three of 18 benchmarks set by Congress and partially met two others, a senior administration official said yesterday. None of those are the high-profile political issues such as passage of a national oil revenue sharing law the Bush administration has said are critical to Iraq’s future.

The State Department, Pentagon and White House dispute some GAO findings, including the conclusion Iraq has only partially met tests involving its budget process and legislation dealing with semiautonomous regions in the large, multiethnic country, two officials said.

Administration officials also disputed that Iraq has failed to provide three trained and ready Iraqi brigades to support Baghdad operations or to ensure the security plan will not provide a safe haven for outlaws.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity to describe internal deliberations that included lengthy meetings yesterday at the White House. The GAO may alter some of its findings in response to administration arguments, one official said.

Administration officials also said the draft report is unrealistically harsh because it assigned pass-or-fail grades to each benchmark.

The GAO found Iraq had fully met requirements to:

• Establish political, media, economic, and services committees in support of the Baghdad security plan. That plan involves many of the 30,000 U.S. troops Bush sent to Iraq this year.

• Establish joint security stations in neighborhoods across Baghdad.

• Ensure the rights of minority political parties in the Iraqi legislature are protected.

Bush has suggested he intends to stick to his Iraq strategy, but in his meeting today at the Pentagon he’s expected to hear some of the joint chiefs express concern at the long-term impact on the military of maintaining a heavy troop presence in Iraq in 2008 and beyond. Now, there are more than 160,000 troops in Iraq, the most since the war began in 2003.

The Army and the Marine Corps have shouldered most of the burden, creating strains service leaders fear could hurt their recruiting as well as their preparedness for other military emergencies. The joint chiefs are not, however, expected to urge Bush to withdraw from Iraq entirely as many Democrats want.

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